Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 2021)
news Georgia on Their Mind STAFFERS FOR PETER DEFAZIO WORKED DOOR TO DOOR IN GEORGIA TO HELP DEMOCRATS WIN BACK THE U.S. SENATE By Emily Topping I t had been a long few days walking DEFAZIO STAFFERS IN GEORGIA through the neighborhoods of Sa- (CLOCKWISE FROM TOP RIGHT): vannah, Georgia, and the miles were CARLY GABRIELSON, SHAYLA FREIRICH, starting to catch up to Sierra Dam- SKYLER CSERVAK, eron. The field director for Oregon NICK HASKINS, Congressman Peter DeFazio, Dam- SIERRA DAMERON AND eron had traveled all the way from BENJAMIN RANDALL Eugene with five other Oregon organizers to urge Georgia residents to vote in the critical Jan. 5 Senate run-off elections. The two Georgia races had the potential to put the Senate back in the hands of the Democratic Party, ensuring that incoming President Joe Biden’s legislative agenda had a chance of passing Congress. By the end of their trip, the team had covered more than 60 miles on foot and 1,800 miles by car across three separate counties. Still, they knew they couldn’t slow down until the polls closed on Jan. 5. The two potential Democratic senators, Jon Ossoff and Rev. Raphael Warnock, would have to fight a decades-long history of voter suppression to mobilize Georgians, specifi- cally Black and low-income voters, to defeat the two Republican incumbents. In the week before the election, Dam- eron spent hours working her way through a stretch of low-income neighborhoods near Savannah, guided by an app Democratic field organizers use to track their progress. She population is Black, the disparities are staggering. could see who was registered to vote, which homes had “It was very difficult to come from Oregon, where we already been canvassed and which might need a second have these restrictions to keep us safe,” Dameron says, visit to offer residents a ride to the polls. According to “to see how these people’s lives are so affected.” the app, the home she walked up to now housed four Dameron says the pandemic seemed to be the number adult residents, only one of whom had cast their ballot. one issue concerning voters, along with wealth inequality “Hi, ma’am,” Dameron said as the door opened. She and disenfranchisement. Minimum wage in Georgia is made sure to adjust her face mask and stand a few feet $5.15 an hour, and many voters said they struggled each apart from the entryway. After confirming that the woman month to pay rent. had already voted, Dameron asked her to remind the other Oftentimes, when Dameron and her team knocked members of the household, listing their names. on doors, they discovered residents who were unable to “Oh, honey,” said the older Black woman holding the vote in the first place because of past criminal histories. door, shaking her head. “All of them have passed away in “I’d say a third of the people I spoke to were disen- the last two months from COVID.” She asked Dameron franchised, a lot of times from drug cases,” she says. In to please update her records. Georgia, strict drug laws mean that possession of more Georgia has been hit particularly hard by the pandemic than an ounce of marijuana is considered a felony. Fel- — the state shattered its single-day record of cases on Jan. ons are barred from voting until the completion of their 8 with nearly 13,000 new infections. The death rate in the sentence, meaning some people Dameron spoke to, who state is 109 per 100,000 people, compared to Oregon’s 41. were unable to pay their legal fees from past cases, hadn’t Part of the issue stems from a lack of statewide direc- voted in 20 years. tion. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp originally barred local Carly Gabrielson, DeFazio’s campaign manager and a municipalities from enacting mask mandates at the begin- 2013 University of Oregon graduate who joined the trip, ning of the pandemic. Although he eventually reversed says their main goal was not to get in the way of the work the order in August 2020, allowing cities and counties to that local activists have been putting in for years. impose stricter COVID-19 safety measures if they choose, “It was remarkable to see the broad coalition build- private businesses and restaurants can opt out. ing, whether in religious circles or communal circles,” At the same time, lack of a strong federal relief program Gabrielson says. She thanks Stacey Abrams, Georgia’s means that many Georgians — much like residents of other former House minority leader, for the years of grass-roots states — have been forced to continue working. Racial activism to get voters to the polls. “People were so excited and class inequalities also mean that certain groups, and determined, despite all of the barriers.” like Black people and those below the poverty line, are Dameron was brought to tears by the determination at much higher risk. of one woman, who drove more than four hours one way Reporting from the Washington Post shows that one from Savannah to Atlanta to pick up her daughter’s in three Black people in the United States know someone ballot and return it to her home county. Other voters who’s died of COVID. In Georgia, where 32 percent of the 6 J A N U A R Y 2 1 , 2 0 2 1 were excited to even see activists touring their area — one woman, whose house sat at the end of a winding, rural road, said she’d never met a political organizer in her 20 years of living there. “Georgia has proven that groups of people can come together and change,” Gabrielson says. “We’re seeing such an incredible expansion in the South and elsewhere with more people of color, and more young people who realize they have a role to play.” Final counts as of Jan. 16 show that the organizers’ hard work paid off: Democrat Ossoff defeated incumbent David Perdue by 55,232 votes, and Rev. Warnock defeated Kelly Loeffler by 93,550. The election of two long-shot Senate seats in Georgia, the first Democrats elected to the Senate from Georgia since 2000, means both houses of the United States Congress are now blue. Organizers in Georgia, however, did not have much time to celebrate their incredible victory on Jan. 5 — a day before the attack on the U.S. Capitol building. Gabrielson, Dameron and the rest of their team were still in Georgia, at sepa- rate Airbnbs and hotels, when news of the attack broke. “The Warnock race had just been called and we were feeling the jubilation of that moment, and then suddenly realized this awful event is unfolding in D.C.,” Gabrielson says. Members of DeFazio’s team quickly convened in one hotel room to watch the news together. “We were able to contact Peter. He understood that the president’s supporters were being goaded on, and this is incredibly dangerous,” Gabrielson says. DeFazio was evacuated from the Capitol building and soon confirmed to his staff that he was safe. In an interview with OPB, DeFazio describes anticipating the chaos and going to REI and purchasing bear spray to defend himself. For Gabrielson, who once worked as an intern at the U.S. House of Representatives, it felt surreal to see a place she holds in such high regard being overrun by domestic terrorists. “Like a lot of folks, we were devastated and then infu- riated,” she says. “They’re desecrating a sacred space.” Dameron described the air in the crowded hotel room as one of overwhelming sadness. “We were grateful that we could be there for each other,” she says. Since returning home from Georgia, members of De- Fazio’s team haven’t had much opportunity to reflect on their significant success. Political organizers are already looking to the 2022 midterms and opportunities to rep- licate their victories across the U.S. In the immediate future, Gabrielson and Dameron look forward to working with a blue Senate to achieve Biden’s “100 days agenda,” which includes tackling the coronavirus with the distribution of 100 million vaccines, as well as steps to overhaul climate policy. “We’re entering a period of reckoning and rebuilding,” Dameron says. “I think the past four years have certainly done a number on the fabric of our democracy, but the individual threads are so strong.” ■ E U G E N E W E E K LY . C O M